I have a text file called 'file.txt' with the content like,
test:one
test_test:two
test_test_test:three
If the pattern is test, then the expected output should be one and similarly for the other two lines.
This is what I have tried.
pattern=test && awk '{split($0,i,":"); if (i[1] ~ /'"$pattern"'$/) print i[2]}'
This command gives the output like,
one
two
three
and pattern=test_test && awk '{split($0,i,":"); if (i[1] ~ /'"$pattern"'$/) print i[2]}'
two
three
How can I match the unique pattern being "test" for "test" and not for "test_test" and so on.
How can I match the unique pattern being test for test and not for test_test and so on.
Don't use a regex for comparing the value, just use equality:
awk -F: -v pat='test' '$1 == pat {print $2}' file
one
awk -F: -v pat='test_test' '$1 == pat {print $2}' file
two
If you really want to use regex, then use it like this with anchors:
awk -F: -v pat='test' '$1 ~ "^" pat "$" {print $2}' file
one
If you want to use a regex, you can create it dynamically with pattern and optionally repeating _ followed by pattern until matching a :
If it matches the start of the string, then you can print the second field.
awk -v pattern='test' -F: '
$0 ~ "^"pattern"(_"pattern")*:" {
print $2
}
' file
Output
one
two
three
Or if only matching the part before the first underscore is also ok, then splitting field 1 on _ and printing field 2:
awk -v pattern='test' -F: ' {
split($1, a, "_")
if(a[1] == pattern) print $2
}' file
Using GNU sed with word boundaries
$ sed -n '/\<test\>/s/[^:]*://p' input_file
one
Related
How can I split a string with awk but printing the match too?
Full random string:
aaa sasawf wewfTotemeswdwqewqwqtotemwewedew
I need to get "wewftotemeswdwqewqwqtotemwewedew" where the substring is random, the only constant is a space and the word totem in it. As you notice the random string might contain more than one totem word, I need awk to get the substring starting from the first match. To be clear, I need "wewftotemeswdwqewqwqtotemwewedew" not "totemwewedew". I also need it to be case insensitive
I can use awk -F ' .*totem' '{print$2}' to print eswdwqewqwqtotemwewedew but how can I print the match too?
With GNU awk for the third arg to match():
$ echo 'aaa sasawf wewftotemeswdwqewqwq' |
awk 'match($0,/[^ ]*totem[^ ]*/,a) { print a[0] }'
wewftotemeswdwqewqwq
and with any awk:
$ echo 'aaa sasawf wewftotemeswdwqewqwq' |
awk 'match($0,/[^ ]*totem[^ ]*/) { print substr($0,RSTART,RLENGTH) }'
wewftotemeswdwqewqwq
For case-insensitive matching with GNU awk:
awk -v IGNORECASE=1 'match($0,/[^ ]*totem[^ ]*/...
and with any awk:
awk 'match(tolower($0),/[^ ]*totem[^ ]*/...
I have the following files:
data.txt
Estring|0006|this_is_some_random_text|more_text
Fstring|0010|random_combination_of_characters
Fstring|0028|again_here
allids.txt (here the columns are separated by semicolon; the real input is tab-delimited)
Estring|0006;MAR0593
Fstring|0002;MAR0592
Fstring|0028;MAR1195
please note: data.txt: the important part is here the first two "columns" = name|number)
Now I want to use awk to search the first part (name|number) of data.txt in allids.txt and output the second column (starting with MAR)
so my expected output would be (again tab-delimited):
Estring|0006|this_is_some_random_text|more_text;MAR0593
Fstring|0010|random_combination_of_characters
Fstring|0028|again_here;MAR1195
I do not know now how to search that first conserved part within awk, the rest should then be:
awk 'BEGIN{FS=OFS="\t"} FNR == NR { a[$1] = $1; next } $1 in a { print a[$0], [$1] }' data.txt allids.txt
I would use a set of field delimiters, like this:
awk -F'[|\t;]' 'NR==FNR{a[$1"|"$2]=$0; next}
$1"|"$2 in a {print a[$1"|"$2]"\t"$NF}' data.txt allids.txt
In your real-data example you can remove the ;. It is in here just to be able to reproduce the example in the question.
Here is another awk that uses a different field separator for both files:
awk -F ';' 'NR==FNR{a[$1]=FS $2; next} {k=$1 FS $2}
k in a{$0=$0 a[k]} 1' allids.txt FS='|' data.txt
Estring|0006|this_is_some_random_text|more_text;MAR0593
Fstring|0010|random_combination_of_characters
Fstring|0028|again_here;MAR1195
This command uses ; as FS for allids.txt and uses | as FS for data.txt.
I have semicolon-separated columns, and I would like to add some characters to a specific column.
aaa;111;bbb
ccc;222;ddd
eee;333;fff
to the second column I want to add '#', so the output should be;
aaa;#111;bbb
ccc;#222;ddd
eee;#333;fff
I tried
awk -F';' -OFS=';' '{ $2 = "#" $2}1' file
It adds the character but removes all semicolons with space.
You could use sed to do your job:
# replaces just the first occurrence of ';', note the absence of `g` that
# would have made it a global replacement
sed 's/;/;#/' file > file.out
or, to do it in place:
sed -i 's/;/;#/' file
Or, use awk:
awk -F';' '{$2 = "#"$2}1' OFS=';' file
All the above commands result in the same output for your example file:
aaa;#111;bbb
ccc;#222;ddd
eee;#333;fff
#atb: Try:
1st:
awk -F";" '{print $1 FS "#" $2 FS $3}' Input_file
Above will work only when your Input_file has 3 fields only.
2nd:
awk -F";" -vfield=2 '{$field="#"$field} 1' OFS=";" Input_file
Above code you could put any field number and could make it as per your request.
Here I am making field separator as ";" and then taking a variable named field which will have the field number in it and then that concatenating "#" in it's value and 1 is for making condition TRUE and not making and action so by default print action will happen of current line.
You just misunderstood how to set variables. Change -OFS to -v OFS:
awk -F';' -v OFS=';' '{ $2 = "#" $2 }1' file
but in reality you should set them both to the same value at one time:
awk 'BEGIN{FS=OFS=";"} { $2 = "#" $2 }1' file
I want to delete lines where the first column does not contain the substring 'cat'.
So if string in col 1 is 'caterpillar', i want to keep it.
awk -F"," '{if($1 != cat) ... }' file.csv
How can i go about doing it?
I want to delete lines where the first column does not contain the substring 'cat'
That can be taken care by this awk:
awk -F, '!index($1, "cat")' file.csv
If that doesn't work then I would suggest you to provide your sample input and expected output in question.
This awk does the job too
awk -F, '$1 ~ /cat/{print}' file.csv
Explanation
-F : "Delimiter"
$1 ~ /cat/ : match pattern cat in field 1
{print} : print
A shorter command is:
awk -F, '$1 ~ "cat"' file.csv
-F is the field delimiter: (,)
$1 ~ "cat" is a (not anchored) regular expression match, match at any position.
As no action has been given, the default: {print} is assumed by awk.
I have a line like:
one:two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
and I want to use awk to get $1 to be one and $2 to be two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
I know I can get it by doing sed before. That is to change the first occurrence of : with sed then awk it using the new delimiter.
However replacing the delimiter with a new one would not help me since I can not guarantee that the new delimiter will not already be somewhere in the text.
I want to know if there is an option to get awk to behave this way
So something like:
awk -F: '{print $1,$2}'
will print:
one two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
I will also want to do some manipulations on $1 and $2 so I don't want just to substitute the first occurrence of :.
Without any substitutions
echo "one:two:three:four:five" | awk -F: '{ st = index($0,":");print $1 " " substr($0,st+1)}'
The index command finds the first occurance of the ":" in the whole string, so in this case the variable st would be set to 4. I then use substr function to grab all the rest of the string from starting from position st+1, if no end number supplied it'll go to the end of the string. The output being
one two:three:four:five
If you want to do further processing you could always set the string to a variable for further processing.
rem = substr($0,st+1)
Note this was tested on Solaris AWK but I can't see any reason why this shouldn't work on other flavours.
Some like this?
echo "one:two:three:four:five:six" | awk '{sub(/:/," ")}1'
one two:three:four:five:six
This replaces the first : to space.
You can then later get it into $1, $2
echo "one:two:three:four:five:six" | awk '{sub(/:/," ")}1' | awk '{print $1,$2}'
one two:three:four:five:six
Or in same awk, so even with substitution, you get $1 and $2 the way you like
echo "one:two:three:four:five:six" | awk '{sub(/:/," ");$1=$1;print $1,$2}'
one two:three:four:five:six
EDIT:
Using a different separator you can get first one as filed $1 and rest in $2 like this:
echo "one:two:three:four:five:six seven:eight" | awk -F\| '{sub(/:/,"|");$1=$1;print "$1="$1 "\n$2="$2}'
$1=one
$2=two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
Unique separator
echo "one:two:three:four:five:six seven:eight" | awk -F"#;#." '{sub(/:/,"#;#.");$1=$1;print "$1="$1 "\n$2="$2}'
$1=one
$2=two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
The closest you can get with is with GNU awk's FPAT:
$ awk '{print $1}' FPAT='(^[^:]+)|(:.*)' file
one
$ awk '{print $2}' FPAT='(^[^:]+)|(:.*)' file
:two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
But $2 will include the leading delimiter but you could use substr to fix that:
$ awk '{print substr($2,2)}' FPAT='(^[^:]+)|(:.*)' file
two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
So putting it all together:
$ awk '{print $1, substr($2,2)}' FPAT='(^[^:]+)|(:.*)' file
one two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
Storing the results of the substr back in $2 will allow further processing on $2 without the leading delimiter:
$ awk '{$2=substr($2,2); print $1,$2}' FPAT='(^[^:]+)|(:.*)' file
one two:three:four:five:six seven:eight
A solution that should work with mawk 1.3.3:
awk '{n=index($0,":");s=$0;$1=substr(s,1,n-1);$2=substr(s,n+1);print $1}' FS='\0'
one
awk '{n=index($0,":");s=$0;$1=substr(s,1,n-1);$2=substr(s,n+1);print $2}' FS='\0'
two:three:four five:six:seven
awk '{n=index($0,":");s=$0;$1=substr(s,1,n-1);$2=substr(s,n+1);print $1,$2}' FS='\0'
one two:three:four five:six:seven
Just throwing this on here as a solution I came up with where I wanted to split the first two columns on : but keep the rest of the line intact.
Comments inline.
echo "a:b:c:d::e" | \
awk '{
split($0,f,":"); # split $0 into array of fields `f`
sub(/^([^:]+:){2}/,"",$0); # remove first two "fields" from `$0`
print f[1],f[2],$0 # print first two elements of `f` and edited `$0`
}'
Returns:
a b c:d::e
In my input I didn't have to worry about the first two fields containing escaped :, if that was a requirement, this solution wouldn't work as expected.
Amended to match the original requirements:
echo "a:b:c:d::e" | \
awk '{
split($0,f,":");
sub(/^([^:]+:)/,"",$0);
print f[1],$0
}'
Returns:
a b:c:d::e